Antje Rumberg

I am a postdoctoral researcher in Thomas Müller's DFG research project "Alternatives for the Future", which forms part of the DFG research unit "What if ...?" hosted at the University of Konstanz.

I studied philosophy (major), mathematics (minor) and English Linguistics (minor) at the University of Tübingen, where I obtained my undergraduate degree (Magister) in 2010 with a thesis on consequence relations in Bolzano. As of December 2010, I held a PhD position in the NWO research project "What is Really Possible? Philosophical Explorations into Branching-History Based Real Modality" launched at Utrecht University, and I followed the research project from Utrecht to Konstanz in October 2013. My PhD thesis under the supervision of Albert Visser (Utrecht University) and Thomas Müller (University of Konstanz) is entitled "Transitions toward a Semantics for Real Possibility".

Branching Time Semantics with Sets of Transitions: A Local Approach to Real Possibility. Trends in Logic XI. Bochum, Germany, 3–5 June 2012.

Branching Time Semantics with Sets of Transitions. PhDs in Logic IV. Ghent, Belgium, 12–13 April 2012.

Bolzano's Concept of Grounding against the Background of Normal Proofs. The Classical Model of Science II: The Axiomatic Method, the Order of Concepts and the Hierarchy of Sciences from Leibniz to Tarski. Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 2–5 August 2011.

Bernard Bolzano's Notion of Form and his Concept of Formal Grounding. (with Stefan Roski). The Notion of Form in the 19th and Early 20th Century Logic and Mathematics. Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 20–21 January 2011.